Monthly Archives: May 2004

Bad Deals, Good Deals

These days, every company seems to be bombarding consumers with great deals in one form or another. Just in case you’re a bit rusty, I’d like to present a brief refresher course.

Here are some bad deals:

* ***MovableType Personal Edition for $69.95|http://secure.sixapart.com/*** (supports up to three users and up to five weblogs)
* One gallon of gasoline for $2.00
* Two scoops of ice cream at ***Baskin Robbins|http://www.baskinrobbins.com/*** for $2.99

Here are some good deals:

* One half-gallon of ***Edy’s|http://www.edys.com/*** ice cream for $1.50 (on sale at ***Stop and Shop|http://www.stopandshop.com/***)
* A six-inch sub, 21-oz drink, and bag of chips at ***Subway|http://www.subway.com/*** for $2.18 (with a full Sub Club card)
* Up to ten hours of parking at the ***CambridgeSide Galleria|http://www.cambridgesidegalleria.com/***, nights and weekends, for $3 (less if you validate with a restaurant)
* ***Taco Bell|http://www.tacobell.com/***

I hope you’ve enjoyed this lesson!

GasTastrophe

I just did a quick calculation, and if I were to need to fill up the gas tank in my car today (which, thankfully, I don’t), I would be paying about $30 for 15 gallons of 87 octane, even at the cheapest stations. I’m probably going to need to fill it next week, though.

🙁

TrackBackLash

qqq|335 Trackback Entries|qqq

Ok, so maybe I feel a little bit bad about contributing to the 335+ trackback entries on Mena’s post about MovableType’s new licensing and pricing scheme.

I can only wonder what’s going on in the minds of those people at SixApart. Will they bend to the user outcry, like reeds in the wind? Or are they resolute in their plan to make MovableType into a real living, desperate to keep their young corporation alive and support the employees they have hired? I really can’t blame them for wanting to make money. To be sure, that would be one of the first things on my mind if I started a corporation. SixApart is in a difficult position, however, having gone from a small group of developers working on a popular, free project, to a corporation trying to develop and support its several product offerings while making enough money to pay the bills and the employees.

Hopefully things will work out well for everybody on their end. I wouldn’t wish bankruptcy or layoffs on anyone, particularly those with families to support and particularly in a high-cost-of-living area such as the San Francisco Bay.

In the meantime, here at prwdot.org I already have a fully-functional WordPress installation up and running. It actually didn’t take too much work to get it up and running, and I am grateful to WP’s founding developer, Matt Mullenweg (who has a very nice site by the way) for personally responding to a couple of my emails in regards to some questions I had. From what I can see, it looks like a very nice product.

I haven’t decided whether or not I’m actually going to switch our blog over, however. For the moment, we don’t have any practical reason to switch. The current version of MovableType is working well for us, and MovableType in general has been working well on the sites that I’ve run since April 16, 2002 – over two years. I personally have put a lot of time and effort into learning the ins and outs of MT, and it seems like a shame to put that all to waste. I rarely make decisions based on idealism, and at this point, switching to WordPress simply because I don’t like the way MovableType is changing would clearly be an idealistic decision.

To quote Radiohead, “Pragmatism, not idealism.”

MovableType: Closing time?

Today, ***Six Apart|http://www.sixapart.com/*** has announced a new pricing and licensing scheme for MovableType. You can read the pricing information page ***here|http://secure.sixapart.com/***. Basically, what it boils down to is that if your MovableType installation has more than a one user and/or more than three blogs, you’ll need to pay to use it.

SixApart provides this ***interactive selector|http://secure.sixapart.com/licensehelp.html*** to help you figure out what your pricing scenario would be, based on your usage of MovableType. Currently, prwdot.org has four active blog users and three active blogs. According to the selector page, I would need to purchase Movable Type 3.0 Personal Edition Volume License I, for US$119.95 in order to cover our usage.

In the words of The Simpsons’ Moe Szyslak, ‘B-whaaaaaaaa??’

What does the paid version get you?

* Download for Movable Type 3.0 Developer Edition and Movable Type 2.661
* Professional support fron Six Apart
* Ability to promote your site on the Movable Type “Recently Updated” list
* Generous limits on weblogs and authors
* Application updates and fixes (not including major upgrades)
* A guaranteed path to future versions
* Access to fee-based services such as installation, advanced support, other services

The only thing I see of real “value” here is the professional support, which I’ve never needed in the past. Do they plan on making the product more difficult to use? In any case, I can see their plan having some success with people who are actually generating revenue from their MovableType installations, or who are taking donations to run their site… but what of the droves of people, like me, who run a moderate-sized installation with no additional funding source other than their own paychecks.

It reeks.

As many former MovableType users have, I’m already checking out ***WordPress|http://www.wordpress.org/***. I know ***Mike|http://www.refugeisland.net/*** loves it, as do others. So it’s certainly a worthy candidate. I’m also open to any other suggestions.

Phone Pics

I used to have a ‘PCS Blog’, to which I could post photos directly from my ***Sanyo SCP-8100|http://www1.sprintpcs.com/explore/PhonesAccessories/PhoneDetails.jsp?selectSkuId=sanyoscp8100*** camera phone. However, I have recently discontinued the Picture Mail service on my SprintPCS account. Cancelling this service does stop me from sending images directly from the phone, but I am still able to take photos on the phone, and store them in its internal memory. It’s just a matter of how to get them from the phone onto a computer. I already have a cable that connects the phone to any computer with a USB port, which I previously used in Mac OS X to connect to the internet over Sprint’s PCS Vision service. I just needed some software.

Enter ***BitPim|http://bitpim.sf.net/***. BitPim is a cross-platform tool (Mac OS X 10.2/10.2, Windows 98/2000/XP, Linux) that allows you to download contact information, calendars, ringtones, and images from compatible phones – sort of a (very) poor man’s PDA sync software. Compatible phones include several LG and Sanyo models. I was able to use BitPim to connect to my phone and offload the photos onto my computer! Hooray!

So I have set up a ***Phone Pics|http://gallery.prwdot.org/phone_pics*** gallery in which I can showcase these photos. The quality is far from that of my regular digital camera, but you can’t expect too much from a sub-$200 device that combines a tri-band, dual-mode phone, calendar, contact book, game-playing device, and digital camera.

Enjoy!

McMarketing

I don’t think I need to say anything – just read about new ***adult-centric Happy Meals|http://money.cnn.com/2004/05/11/news/fortune500/mcdonalds_happymeal/index.htm?cnn=yes***.

MVPs (Most Viewed Photos)

If you haven’t taken a look at our photo gallery lately, stop on by World Wide Photography.

I have added a new feature that allows you to see the top photos based on the number of views they have, as well as the latest photo comments, random images, and more. You’ll see these links near the top of the photo gallery, just underneath our spiffy new logo!

Speaking of the new logo, I have also created a “web badge” version of it which you’ll see at the top of our left hand navigation bar. If you would like to link to our photo gallery, feel free to use the image with your link:

World Wide Photography

Strawberry Heaven

Dear Aunt Chris, (who I hope reads this!)

This afternoon I (finally) whipped up the “Strawberry Cake” recipe that you sent me for my Bridal Shower.

I love strawberry cake, and this one definately took the cake! Yum, yum, yum! My parents and brother were here for a Mother’s Day lunch and we all loved it. I’m glad that there are left overs to munch on.

I wonder, would this recipe be just as good if I used blueberries, or cherries? That will be an experiment for another day.

Thanks again!
Love,
Becky (and Peter, too!)